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Challenges to Issue Resolution

Politics
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Challenges to Issue Resolution

Politics
01 May 2026

Challenges to the Resolution of a Global Issue

Overview

Global issues persist precisely because they are difficult to resolve. Understanding the challenges to resolution is as analytically important as understanding causes — it explains why capable actors, despite awareness and stated commitments, often fail to achieve lasting solutions. In VCE Politics, students must identify and evaluate the specific challenges that prevent or slow resolution of their chosen global issue.

KEY TAKEAWAY: Challenges to resolution are not simply failures — they reflect deep structural tensions in the international system: the tension between sovereignty and global norms, between short-term national interests and long-term collective welfare, and between powerful and vulnerable states.

Framework: Categories of Challenges

Category Nature of Challenge Example
Political Geopolitical rivalry, domestic politics, national sovereignty US-China competition undermining joint climate action; Senate blocking climate treaties
Economic Conflicting economic interests, costs of transition, free-riding Fossil fuel industries’ lobbying power; developing nations resisting emissions caps
Institutional Weak institutions, lack of enforcement, bureaucratic inefficiency UNFCCC consensus rule; Green Climate Fund slow disbursement
Technical/Scientific Complexity, uncertainty, disputed evidence Disagreement over carbon accounting; limited carbon capture technology
Social/Cultural Public resistance, nationalism, denial Anti-climate-action populist movements; denial campaigns by fossil fuel interests
Legal Jurisdictional gaps, sovereignty barriers, non-compliance No court can compel a sovereign state to meet NDCs

Case Study: Climate Change — Challenges to Resolution

Challenge 1: The Collective Action Problem (Structural)

Climate change is a global commons problem. The atmosphere is a shared resource — no state owns it, all states contribute to its degradation, and all suffer the consequences. This creates a powerful structural incentive for free-riding: states benefit from others’ emissions reductions without bearing costs themselves.

  • Example: India and China argued at COP26 that developed nations (who caused the majority of historical emissions) should bear the greatest burden of transition costs. This is a legitimate equity argument, but it also creates negotiating gridlock.

Challenge 2: Great Power Rivalry (Political)

The strategic competition between the United States and China — the world’s two largest emitters — means that climate cooperation is often sacrificed to geopolitical rivalry:
- Trade wars (2018–2020) under Trump disrupted US-China climate diplomacy channels
- China’s Belt and Road Initiative continues to fund fossil fuel infrastructure in developing nations
- Despite the US-China Joint Statement on Climate (November 2021), cooperation has been repeatedly strained by tensions over Taiwan, trade, and technology

Challenge 3: Fossil Fuel Industry Political Power (Economic)

The fossil fuel industry wields enormous political influence:
- Global fossil fuel subsidies reached \$7 trillion in 2022 (IMF estimate, including implicit subsidies)
- Major oil-producing states (Saudi Arabia, Russia, UAE) used COP28 hosting and negotiating positions to resist binding phaseout language
- In the US, the Citizens United ruling allows unlimited corporate political spending — fossil fuel companies have spent over \$2 billion on lobbying since 2000

Challenge 4: The Development Paradox (Economic/Equity)

Developing nations face a profound dilemma:
- They need economic growth to lift populations out of poverty — historically achieved through fossil fuel industrialisation
- Yet the planet cannot sustain another wave of fossil-fuel-driven development at the scale of China or India
- Climate finance commitments (the \$100 billion/year promised by 2020 in Copenhagen) have consistently fallen short, undermining trust in the multilateral process

Challenge 5: Institutional Design Failures (Institutional)

  • UNFCCC decision-making requires consensus — meaning the most reluctant state sets the pace
  • The Paris Agreement’s NDC mechanism is self-determined and non-binding, creating a “pledge and review” system that relies entirely on good faith
  • The UN Security Council — the only UN body with enforcement power — is structurally blocked from taking action on climate by the veto power of fossil-fuel-dependent permanent members (Russia, China)

Challenge 6: Temporal Mismatch (Political/Scientific)

Climate change operates on decades-long timescales while democratic politics operates on 4–5 year electoral cycles. This creates a systematic bias toward short-term economic interests over long-term climate investment — leaders who impose climate costs now face electoral punishment before benefits materialise.

EXAM TIP: The strongest answers don’t just list challenges — they evaluate their relative significance. Which challenge is the most fundamental? Which is most amenable to resolution? Structure your argument around a clear thesis.

Case Study: Humanitarian Crisis — Challenges to Resolution

For a humanitarian crisis (e.g. Rohingya crisis, Sudan conflict, Syrian refugee crisis):

Challenge Example
Sovereignty Myanmar rejected UN involvement as interference in internal affairs
UNSC deadlock China and Russia vetoed Security Council resolutions on Syria; China blocked action on Myanmar
Refugee policy divergence States disagreed on responsibility-sharing for Syrian refugees; European states closed borders
Funding gaps UNHCR consistently underfunded — only 54% of needs met in 2022
Access denial Myanmar military blocked humanitarian access to Rakhine State
Spoiler actors Armed groups in conflicts deliberately target aid workers; non-state armed groups obstruct peace processes

Evaluating the Relative Significance of Challenges

Use these criteria when comparing challenges:

  1. Root vs. proximate: Is this a surface-level obstacle or a fundamental structural problem?
  2. Reversibility: Could a change in political leadership or institutional reform address this challenge?
  3. Scale: How many actors does this challenge affect? How much does it constrain collective action?
  4. Interaction: Do challenges compound each other? (e.g. great power rivalry AND collective action problem together make the UNFCCC’s consensus rule especially damaging)

COMMON MISTAKE: Students often describe challenges as if they were complete barriers to any progress. A more sophisticated answer acknowledges that progress has occurred (e.g. Paris Agreement, COP28 fossil fuel language) while explaining why challenges prevent full resolution.

VCAA FOCUS: VCAA assessors want to see that you understand challenges as analytically distinct from causes — causes explain why an issue exists; challenges explain why it persists despite the best efforts of global actors.

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